Bajus v. Syracuse, etc., Railroad
Bajus v. Syracuse, etc., Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff was, in 1877, the yard-master of the defendant at Syracuse, and as such, it was his duty to superintend and aid in the shifting of cars, and to couple and uncouple cars. The shifting engine at that place, on the day alleged in the complaint, was attached to twelve cars; and, after drawing them a short distance up an ascending grade, it became stalled, and then, under the direction of the plaintiff, the engine was hacked so as to enable him to uncouple some of the cars. For that purpose he went between two cars, while they were moving slowly backward, and his foot caught under a brake beam, and he was dragged along about forty-five feet, when a car-wheel ran over one of his legs, and crushed it so as to make its amputation necessary. This action was brought to recover damages for the injury thus caused, and the claim of the' plaintiff is that the injury was due solely to neglect chargeable to the defendant.
The plaintiff does not complain that the,road-bed, or the cars, or any of the appliances which he was required to use, were insufficient or out of order. His sole complaint is that the engine was out of repair, and insufficient for the use to which it was devoted, and against it he makes these complaints, which I will notice specially : (1) The flues of the engine were foul, and somewhat stopped up. The only effect of this was that steam was generated less rapidly, and the power of the engine was thus diminished. (2) The main valve in the steam-chest leaked, and that diminished the power of the engine by just so much as the steam escaped, and had no other effect. (3) But the more serious defect was that the throttle-valve leaked.
One effect of a leakage of steam through the throttle-valve is that the steam cannot be entirely shut off, and the consequence is that an engine with such a defect may move from its position, when placed at rest, unless blocked. But when the throttle-valve is open, and the engine in motion, there can be no leakage, as all the steam passes through the open valve; and hence this defect does not interfere with the power of the engine. There is no other effect caused by the leaking of the steam through the throttle-valve, which is
These defects may have diminished the power of the engine by several horse-power, so that the engine, instead of being, for instance, eighty horse-power, was only seventy. It matters not that this diminished power came from these defects, nor how the engine came to be of only seventy horse-power. The responsibility for the defects is no greater than it would have been if the defendant had furnished a new engine of precisely the same power. The plaintiff was familiar with the capacity and power of the engine, and in no way entrapped or deceived by its use. Suppose, then, the defendant had furnished a new engine of seventy horse power,—precisely the same power which we may assume this had at the time of the accident,—upon what principle could it be said that it would be hable for such an accident ? Can it be laid down as a principle of law that it is bound to furnish to its employees engines suitable and adequate in power to every emergency ?
Who but the employer shall determine how powerful an engine shall be at any place and for any purpose % Suppose at this place the defendant had furnished an engine capable of moving but three cars at a time and running but ten miles an hour, and the plaintiff had known it, could he justly complain of it ? Would such an engine in any legal or proper sense be dangerous ? If an employer should furnish to an employee a horse which from natural weakness
It would impose upon every railroad company very embarrassing, onerous and unjust responsibilities, if in the case of accidents with moving trains it was to be a subject of_ inquiry before a jury whether the particular accident might not have been avoided with an engine of greater or less power.
If this engine drawing a train upon a railroad had in consequence of its imperfect condition become stalled so that the passengers and freight failed to reach their destination in proper time, or if it had broken down and thereby injured some one, or if when placed at rest it had run away in consequence of the leakage through the throttle valve, different questions would have been presented for our consideration.
But without violating any rules that have been laid down for the protection of employees we are constrained to hold in this case that this was not as to the plaintiff a dangerous engine, that it was reasonably safe and proper, and that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant in putting it to the service in which it was employed, and that therefore, upon the facts, as they now appear, the plaintiff has no cause of action against the defendant; and this conclusion finds ample support in the cases of Burke v. Wetherbee, 98 N. Y., 562; Marsh v. Chickering, 101 id., 396; Sweeney v. B. & Jones Em. Co., 101 id., 520.
In the case of Marsh v. Chickering, Judge Miller, following prior authorities, said: “Therule is that the master does not owe to_ his servants the duty to furnish the best known or conceivable appliances; he is simply required to furnish such as are reasonably safe and suitable, such as a prudent man would furnish if his own life were exposed to the danger that would result from unsuitable or unsafe ap
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
Rapallo, Miller and Finch, JJ., concur. Danforth, J., reads for affirmance; Andrews, J., concurs; Ruger, Oh. J., takes no part._
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Louis Bajus, Resp't v. Syracuse, etc., Railroad Co., Appl't
- Status
- Published